Vsevolozhsk constituency

Russian legislative constituency From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Vsevolozhsk constituency (No.111[a]) is a Russian legislative constituency in Leningrad Oblast. The constituency covers northern Leningrad Oblast and eastern suburbs of Saint Petersburg.

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Vsevolozhsk single-member constituency
Constituency of the
Russian State Duma
Constituency boundaries from 2016 to 2026
Deputy
Federal subjectLeningrad Oblast
DistrictsKirovsky, Priozersky, Vsevolozhsky, Vyborgsky
Other territoryAbkhazia (Sukhum–4)
Voters580,527 (2021)[1]
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The constituency has been represented since 2021 by United Russia deputy Svetlana Zhurova, four-term State Duma member and 2006 Olympic speed skater, who won the open seat, after defeating one-term United Russia incumbent Vladimir Drachev in the primary.

Boundaries

1993–1995: Ivangorod, Kingiseppsky District, Lomonosovsky District, Luzhsky District, Priozersky District, Slantsevsky District, Sosnovy Bor, Volosovsky District, Vsevolozhsk, Vsevolozhsky District, Vyborg, Vyborgsky District[2]
The constituency covered northern and western Leningrad Oblast, connected only through the Gulf of Finland, including the cities of Ivangorod, Sosnovy Bor, Vsevolozhsk and Vyborg.

1995–2007: Kirovsky District, Koltushi, Kuznechnoye, Priozersky District, Sertolovo, Shlisselburg, Svetogorsk, Vsevolozhsk, Vsevolozhsky District, Vyborg, Vyborgsky District[3][4]
The constituency was heavily altered following the 1995 redistricting as Leningrad Oblast gained a third district. Western Leningrad Oblast portion of this seat became the basis for new Kingisepp constituency, while northern Leningrad Oblast remained in the former constituency. This seat also gained Kirovsky District from the Volkhov constituency.

2016–2026: Kirovsky District, Priozersky District, Vsevolozhsky District, Vyborgsky District[5]
The constituency was re-created for the 2016 election and retained all of its former territory.

Since 2026: Priozersky District, Vsevolozhsky District (Agalatovo, Bugry, Dubrovka, Koltushi, Kuyvozi, Kuzmolovsky, Imeni Morozova, Murino, Novoye Devyatkino, Rakhya, Romanovka, Sertolovo, Shcheglovo, Toksovo, Verkhniye Oselki, Vsevolozhsk, Yukki), Vyborgsky District[6]
After the 2025 redistricting the constituency was significantly changed due to growth in Saint Petersburg eastern suburbs. The constituency lost Kirovsky District and a small portion of Vsevolozhsky District (including the megasuburb Kudrovo) to Volkhov constituency.

Members elected

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Election results

1993

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Summary of the 12 December 1993 Russian legislative election in the Vsevolozhsk constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Yevgeny Fyodorov Russian Democratic Reform Movement 63,987 17.97%
Aleksandr Arkhishin Yavlinsky–Boldyrev–Lukin 43,984 12.35%
Vitaly Klimov Independent 35,198 9.88%
Rashid Ismagilov Choice of Russia 34,061 9.56%
Stepan Kolomeytsev Civic Union 29,374 8.25%
Nikolay Dmitriyev Agrarian Party 19,461 5.46%
against all 96,699 27.15%
Total 356,172 100%
Source: [7][8]
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1995

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Summary of the 17 December 1995 Russian legislative election in the Vsevolozhsk constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Vladimir Grigoryev Communists and Working Russia - for the Soviet Union 27,963 10.08%
Anatoly Kalinin Congress of Russian Communities 22,449 8.09%
Yury Alferov Independent 21,201 7.64%
Vitaly Stepanko Our Home – Russia 19,722 7.11%
Yevgeny Fyodorov (incumbent) Bloc of Independents 19,228 6.93%
Valery Shkoldin Independent 18,322 6.60%
Svetlana Yurkova Independent 15,340 5.53%
Aleksandr Permyakov Independent 15,045 5.42%
Vladimir Lebedev Power to the People! 11,664 4.20%
Lyudmila Chayka Christian-Democratic Union - Christians of Russia 11,409 4.11%
Vyacheslav Ulybin Liberal Democratic Party 11,325 4.08%
Viktor Denikin Union of Patriots 9,987 3.60%
Galina Oksyutnik Ivan Rybkin Bloc 8,373 3.02%
Aleksey Maksimenkov Independent 7,340 2.65%
Yevgeny Polyakov Russian All-People's Movement 3,645 1.31%
Aleksey Redozubov Independent 3,603 1.30%
against all 41,287 14.88%
Total 277,484 100%
Source: [9]
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1999

A by-election was scheduled after Against all line received the most votes.

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Summary of the 19 December 1999 Russian legislative election in the Vsevolozhsk constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Olga Borisova Independent 34,319 14.54%
Sergey Kyshtymov Independent 29,236 12.38%
Vladimir Grigoryev (incumbent) Communists and Workers of Russia - for the Soviet Union 26,044 11.03%
Aleksandr Trafimov Independent 22,204 9.40%
Viktor Pleskachevsky Unity 17,031 7.21%
Boris Moiseyev Yabloko 13,696 5.80%
Aleksandr Lysov Independent 11,208 4.75%
Viktor Rybachok Independent 9,976 4.23%
Oleg Shelyagov Independent 6,621 2.80%
Rashid Ismagilov Independent 6,180 2.62%
Valery Grigoryev Liberal Democratic Party 4,996 2.12%
Dmitry Yakubovsky Independent 4,787 2.03%
Vladislav Kosenko Spiritual Heritage 4,047 1.71%
Taras Dzhus Independent 3,154 1.34%
Valery Gerasimov Socialist Party 1,232 0.52%
Aleksandr Vtulkin Independent 1,137 0.48%
Vadim Raskovalov Russian Socialist Party 777 0.33%
against all 34,783 14.73%
Total 236,106 100%
Source: [10]
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2000

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Summary of the 26 March 2000 by-election in the Vsevolozhsk constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Aleksandr Nevzorov Independent 116,258 38.07%
Yury Fedotov Independent 54,410 17.82%
Yury Trusov Independent 1,558 6.81%
Yury Sevenard Independent 18,773 6.15%
Anatoly Smirnov Independent 15,365 5.03%
Vladimir Grigoryev Independent 12,545 4.11%
Gennady Seleznev Independent 10,652 3.49%
Mikhail Glushchenko Independent 4,406 1.44%
Galina Sharova Independent 3,592 1.18%
Oleg Shelyagov Independent 2,698 0.88%
Anton Volkov Independent 2,168 0.71%
Rudolf Kagramanov Independent 1,104 0.36%
Vyacheslav Shevchenko Independent 601 0.20%
against all 35,266 11.55%
Total 303,209 100%
Source: [11]
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2003

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Summary of the 7 December 2003 Russian legislative election in the Vsevolozhsk constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Aleksandr Nevzorov (incumbent) Independent 37,904 18.58%
Zalina Medoyeva Union of Right Forces 28,501 13.97%
Vyacheslav Arutyunov Independent 17,642 8.65%
Olga Borisova Independent 16,820 8.24%
Anatoly Kontashev Independent 14,388 7.05%
Irina Tomason Independent 11,274 5.53%
Damir Shadayev Liberal Democratic Party 11,260 5.52%
Mikhail Aleksandrov Rodina 11,257 5.52%
Yury Terentyev Russian Communist Workers Party — Russian Party of Communists 10,990 5.39%
Yelena Slepko Agrarian Party 6,068 2.97%
Nikolay Prokudin Yabloko 5,378 2.64%
Viktor Stepanov United Russian Party Rus' 1,386 0.68%
against all 27,712 13.58%
Total 204,222 100%
Source: [12]
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2016

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Summary of the 18 September 2016 Russian legislative election in the Vsevolozhsk constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Vladimir Drachev United Russia 100,133 47.64%
Andrey Lebedev Liberal Democratic Party 23,415 11.14%
Valeria Kovalenko A Just Russia 22,260 10.59%
Vladimir Taymazov Communist Party 13,415 6.38%
Lyudmila Savina Communists of Russia 10,074 4.79%
Aleksey Etmanov Yabloko 8,569 3.48%
Vladimir Popov Party of Growth 7,322 3.48%
Larisa Larkina The Greens 5,971 2.84%
Anastasia Zatochnaya Rodina 5,791 2.75%
Tatyana Lepetenina Civic Platform 3,100 1.47%
Total 210,208 100%
Source: [13]
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2021

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Summary of the 17-19 September 2021 Russian legislative election in the Vsevolozhsk constituency
Candidate Party Votes %
Svetlana Zhurova United Russia 101,200 43.20%
Vadim Budeyev Communist Party 40,597 17.33%
Valeria Kovalenko A Just Russia — For Truth 20,929 8.93%
Andrey Lebedev Liberal Democratic Party 13,249 5.66%
Aleksey Shurshikov New People 12,131 5.18%
Vasily Ivanov Party of Pensioners 11,726 5.01%
Lyudmila Savina Communists of Russia 9,100 3.88%
Anton Gordyuk Yabloko 6,468 2.76%
Valery Shinkarenko Rodina 4,174 1.78%
Aleksandr Gabitov Civic Platform 3,141 1.34%
Total 234,241 100%
Source: [14]
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Notes

  1. No.101 in 1993-1995, No.99 in 1995-2003, No.100 in 2003-2007

References

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